Booney wrote:blueandwhite wrote:I suspect as others have mentioned that it is both a deflection to take the heat off Hinkley and an ambit claim to get a better deal from the SANFL.
Port Adelaide magpies since its merger with the Port Adelaide AFL franchise has become "one club."
The fact is, the only reason the magpie name still exists, is a marketing exercise by the AFL franchise to garner support from those magpie diehards who still embrace the sanfl magpies.
The Port Adelaide Magpies team that currently plays in the sanfl is in fact an AFL reserves team, playing by license in the SANFL.
Port Adelaide have NOT been a member club of the SANFL since the "one club" merger.
Like the Crows they do NOT have a delegate who sits on the SANFL League club delegates table.
The Crows are paying the SANFL to field a reserves side in the SANFL.-Port Adelaide are not.
Before the "one club" merger the SANFL bailed Port Adelaide out of financial ruin - both SANFL and AFL (when they held the license) on numerous occasions .In fact the week before Port Adelaide played its first game at Adelaide Oval,Port asked the SANFL for a further 1 mill to see them through.
The SANFL went into debt, to borrow money to give to Port Adelaide to keep them afloat. Port Adelaide could not get a loan from anyone.
The SANFL have bent over backwards for Port Adelaide. they have helped them financially to survive. The SANFL have changed vast numbers of rules and requirements for them to field a team in the SANFL and compromised the competition to accommodate them.
As for Kochy bleating about a game where Finlayson was the only senior player representing them in an SANFL game earlier in the year....Not that he would know or even care...but Finlayson's salary alone would be more than double the opposing teams entire salary cap for the year.
If Port Adelaide want a better deal, then go elsewhere.
Makes you wonder doesn't it, why do the SANFL want Port Adelaide to survive?
Must be something in it for the SANFL, you'd think.
Agreed, I don't know why they want them to survive - maybe (hopefully) that thought process is changing. If their attitude is to put the SANFL first.
I think initially it was partly believing the spin they (SANFL) were told by the AFL teams i.e how they would promote the SANFL, the advantage of the t.v broadcasts, the mediocre payment made by the Crows early on for participating, the crowd numbers and similar. Since 2013, over time all supposed positives for making their case have proven false. All that's resulted is poorer results by the AFL teams and the destruction of the SANFL integrity. The SANFL survived quite well during the COVID year with the non participation of the AFL teams.
What has transpired is a lot of SANFL and SANFL club people involved in the decision making process and with a pro- AFL reserve attitude have ended up with cushy AFL club jobs.
The AFL reserves completely detract from the SANFL and Koch has a funny way of promoting the SANFL.
The only things I can think of that the AFL reserves contribute to the comp is it allows some "old school" Port Magpie supporters to watch a team play locally, wearing the Magpie guernsey (minus the Magpie) without the AFL cost of entry.
Booney, making a case for the Power reserves what do you think they add to the SANFL and what's in it for the SANFL?